Czech who made Moai statues walk returns to Easter Island

You know them from magazines or TV documentaries. The giant stone statues
from Easter Island in the South Pacific, human heads on male torsos carved
from volcanic ash. They belong to a number of stone monuments around the
world, such as Stonehenge or the pyramids, whose origin remains a mystery,
constantly tormenting teams of scientists trying to work out how ancient
civilisations managed to move around blocks of stone weighing many tonnes.
The mystery of the "moai" - as the statues are called in the
local language - was solved seventeen years ago by a Czech engineer called
Pavel Pavel, who is now returning to Easter Island.

Local legend says that the statues arrived at their current locations by
themselves - that they actually "walked". There is no written
record on the origin of the almost 900 statues but archaeologists believe
they were carved, transported, and erected between AD 1400 and 1600.
Several expeditions visited the island during the last century, trying to
work out how the early Easter Islanders transported the moai statues. When
the recently deceased Norwegian explorer and archaeologist Thor Heyerdahl
announced his plans to conduct more field work on Easter Island in 1986,
he did not know his expedition would be joined by a young Czech engineer,
Pavel Pavel, who would eventually make the moai statues walk.

"The walk of the moai was the result of many years of effort. It was
a great feeling, the locals started shouting riva-riva, meaning good or
very well, and it was all fantastic. I remembered my friends back in
Strakonice who helped me to cast and move the 12-tonne statue, and all
those who helped me then to prepare for the expedition with Thor
Heyerdahl."

Mr Pavel had followed the research and experiments on Easter Island since
1981 and came up with a theory. With the help of his friends he cast a 4.5
metre tall concrete statue weighing 12 tonnes. In the South Bohemian town
of Strakonice, they conducted a trial. They fastened ropes around the top
of the head as well as around the base of the bust and through a system of
tilting and twisting Mr Pavel and sixteen other people were able to move
the statue forward. In this manner the experimental image wriggled forward
as if it were "walking". Whereas 180 people pulling a statue on
its back had been used during Thor Heyerdahl's experiment on Easter Island
in 1956, only 17 people were needed for Pavel to transport a "walking
moai".

Thor Heyerdahl invited Pavel Pavel to join the KonTiki Museum expedition
to Easter Island in January 1986 to try out his experiments on an original
statue. It worked well and the mystery was solved but no reminder was left
on the Island of the work and achievement of the expedition. Mr Pavel is
travelling to Easter Island in the middle of January to attach memorial
plaques near the statue he moved, remembering the expedition of the late
Thor Heyerdahl.

"There will be four plates, in English, in Spanish, in Czech and in
Rapa Nui, the local language of Easter Island. The signs will say that
this statue was transported in 1986 by Thor Heyerdahl's expedition, by
sixteen people and the operation was conducted by the Czech engineer Pavel
Pavel."